The Northern Caribbean University’s Alumni Federation recently organized its most ambitious fundraiser event to help hundreds of students affected by the Covid-19 pandemic. The media-thon raised US$350,000 in pledges and donations on May 24, 2020.
The event, held on the Mandeville, Jamaica, campus marked the official launch of a fundraising drive to raise 1 million US dollars by July 31, 2020. This is the first time that the university has been able to raise so much money in a single fundraising event, university leaders said.
Scores of volunteer fundraisers spread across NCU’s global alumni network continue to solicit donations to reach the target, organizers said. The proceeds will go toward the COVID-19 Scholarship Fund, which has been established specifically to assist financially challenged students to return in the Fall semester to continue their education. Each year many of NCU students halt their studies because of a lack of financial support.
NCU has seen an average of 4,000 students registered annually throughout its main campus in Mandeville and its three other extension campuses across Jamaica, during the past four years.
According to university officials, this year the situation has been aggravated. NCU President Lincoln Edwards disclosed that the pandemic has dried up sources of income for many students through the literature evangelism ministry or overseas work. This has been compounded by loss of family support due to the closure of the tourism and other industries, reduced remittance inflows and the inability of family members who are farmers to sell their produce as well as students losing employment on campus. Dr. Edwards also pointed to reduced income from the Seventh-day Adventist conferences that traditionally assist in funding the university.